Buying Human Body Parts Online Is Easier Than You Think

The neck bones of Cody Saunders, who died on his 24th birthday and whose parents donated his body to science, cost two Reuters journalists just $300 and shipping.

The journalists aren’t doctors, or forensic pathologists, or anatomy teachers, and the company that sold it to them never asked if they were. They didn’t have to ask. There’s no federal U.S. law that requires that you have any title, certification, or paperwork to own, buy, sell, or do almost anything you want with human remains, as long as they’re not Native American or for transplant.

While many bodies donated to science end up being invaluable tools for research and learning, there's no guarantee. They could go to just about anyone without your loved ones knowing.

There are a few states in which the human remains trade is regulated, including, as of last year, Louisiana. However, other state laws are vaguely-worded or non-existent, and there is a thriving marketplace that makes it easier to buy a human skull than a Kinder Egg in the United States.

Currently, you can buy human remains on several retail websites, such as The Bone Room, Zane Wylie’s RealHumanSkull.com, and Skulls Unlimited. Skulls Unlimited, which is the “the world’s leading supplier of osteological specimens,” told National Geographic that they only sell recent-donor bones to bonafide medical and education professionals, but anyone can buy antique specimens. There’s also no federal law stopping the medical professionals from re-selling the remains to whomever.

For many years before the ban, eBay’s official policy was that you could sell clean, articulated (pinned and hinged) human remains “for medical purposes,” but did not require vetting. EBay issued the ban after a study found that 56 out of the 454 skulls listed over seven months were “archaeological or forensic,” meaning non-medical.

Cody Saunders’ parents, for their part, were not happy that their son’s body parts were sold for profit to whoever wanted it, when they thought they were donating to science, according to the Reuters special investigation into the trade of human donor remains. However, this industry is integral to studying anatomical sciences and advancing medicine. People who trade human bones as oddities or art feel as though these older, retired bones deserve to be appreciated, not destroyed or cast aside. The question of where to draw the line in ethics—and law—is up for debate.